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The Continuing Role of Hardiness and Grit on Performance and Retention in West Point Cadets
Authors:Salvatore R. Maddi  Michael D. Matthews  Dennis R. Kelly  Brandilynn J. Villarreal  Kristin K. Gundersen  Sarah C. Savino
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology and Social Behavior, University of California, Irvinesrmaddi@uci.edu;3. Department of Behavioral Sciences and Leadership, United States Military Academy, West Point, New York;4. Department of Institutional Research and Analysis, United States Military Academy, West Point, New York;5. Department of Psychology and Social Behavior, University of California, Irvine
Abstract:Being an army reservist involves stress and uncertainty. While some individuals use exercise to cope with stress, no previous research has ever studied the relationship between army reservists exercise habits and perceived stress. The current study examined the hypothesis that Israeli army reserves in combat roles would report greater perceived stress and (to cope with the stress) exhibit more intensive exercise habits, as well as higher risk for exercise addiction, than the army reserves who are in a non-combat (i.e., office job) role and controls who are not in the army reserve. Participants (n = 277) completed questionnaires assessing their regular exercises habits, perceived stress, and risk for exercise addiction. The results showed that combat reserves scored higher on all dependent measures than non-combat reserves and controls. Perceived stress accounted for 38.8% to 56.6% of the variance in the risk of exercise addiction. Findings suggest that Israeli army reserves in combat role exercise more, for longer episodes, with greater reported intensity, and are at a greater risk for exercise addiction than the reserves in non-combat roles and controls. The higher risk for exercise addiction in the combat reserves, accompanied by a lower predictive power of the perceived stress, reflects a weaker association between these two variables in this group, most likely because combat reserves feel obliged to be physically fit in case of active deployment. This is the first study to show that differences in reservists’ roles is associated with different levels of risk for exercise addiction.
Keywords:Whole Candidate Score  hardiness  grit  Cadet Performance Score
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